When Brown v. Board of Education\u27 prohibited racial segregation in public education, it inaugurated a great debate about equal citizenship and federalism that spanned the second half of the twentieth century. The case reverberates with conflict, with stories about the possibilities - and limits - of constitutional law. This Article explores the relation of constitutional principle and constitutional politics in the ways we talk about the decision\u27s meaning. It shows how convictions about the principle on which Brown rests were forged in conflicts over enforcing Brown, and demonstrates how such conflicts have produced indirection and contradiction in doctrines that enforce the equal protection guarantee. By revisiting early arguments a...
In 1954, fifty-eight years after the Plessy v. Ferguson decision, the Supreme Court was afforded ano...
Part of the "Symposium from Brown to Bakke to Grutter: Constitutionalizing and defining racial equal...
Thirty years ago, the Supreme Court\u27s decisions in the Brown litigation started the school system...
When Brown v. Board of Education\u27 prohibited racial segregation in public education, it inaugurat...
The import of Brown v. Board of Education is not confined to school segregation. Its more general si...
For decades, the Supreme Court has sharply divided in equal protection race discrimination cases. As...
This Article examines the view, championed by Justice Scalia, that traditionalism can and should pla...
This Essay offers the first in-depth examination of the role of colorblind constitutionalism in the ...
This Article explores how Brown v. Board of Education and subsequent Court decisions have impacted t...
The Supreme Court increasingly has interpreted the Equal Protection Clause as a mandate for the stat...
This Article examines some of the jurisprudential roots of the racial discrimination debate, tracing...
Brown v. Board of Education [1] is the seminal case of the Twentieth Century. Mere mention of the ca...
This paper addresses the historical developments in the legal struggle for racial equality. Examinin...
For years after the Supreme Court ruled segregation unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education,...
In Part I of the Article, I examine early cases in which the Court described segregation as a form o...
In 1954, fifty-eight years after the Plessy v. Ferguson decision, the Supreme Court was afforded ano...
Part of the "Symposium from Brown to Bakke to Grutter: Constitutionalizing and defining racial equal...
Thirty years ago, the Supreme Court\u27s decisions in the Brown litigation started the school system...
When Brown v. Board of Education\u27 prohibited racial segregation in public education, it inaugurat...
The import of Brown v. Board of Education is not confined to school segregation. Its more general si...
For decades, the Supreme Court has sharply divided in equal protection race discrimination cases. As...
This Article examines the view, championed by Justice Scalia, that traditionalism can and should pla...
This Essay offers the first in-depth examination of the role of colorblind constitutionalism in the ...
This Article explores how Brown v. Board of Education and subsequent Court decisions have impacted t...
The Supreme Court increasingly has interpreted the Equal Protection Clause as a mandate for the stat...
This Article examines some of the jurisprudential roots of the racial discrimination debate, tracing...
Brown v. Board of Education [1] is the seminal case of the Twentieth Century. Mere mention of the ca...
This paper addresses the historical developments in the legal struggle for racial equality. Examinin...
For years after the Supreme Court ruled segregation unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education,...
In Part I of the Article, I examine early cases in which the Court described segregation as a form o...
In 1954, fifty-eight years after the Plessy v. Ferguson decision, the Supreme Court was afforded ano...
Part of the "Symposium from Brown to Bakke to Grutter: Constitutionalizing and defining racial equal...
Thirty years ago, the Supreme Court\u27s decisions in the Brown litigation started the school system...